I'll do my best.
The transaction involves the CDMA business. CDMA is a particular type of technology for cellphone usage. It's predominantly used in North America. It was actually originally developed by Qualcomm in the United States and adopted by a number of the major operators in North America—in Canada that included Bell Canada and Telus, and in the United States Verizon, Sprint, U.S. Cellular, and a number of others. So that technology is what you use on your cellphone. The actual business we're selling is a combination of the assets, the employees—about 2,500 employees—and the customer contracts that go with those customers we have predominantly in North America. That business is pretty much the whole thing that will go with that transaction.
When we talk about LTE, it is really not a business, because there are no contracts going with the transaction. They are assets associated with development of next generation technology. So with any of these technologies as your CDMA—if any of you have a BlackBerry, you're using it for voice and for data transmission—the next generation technology, called LTE, will offer much broader bandwidth on those same devices, and over time it will replace the capabilities of the CDMA networks and people will overlay them.
So in layman's terms, that's what we're dealing with here.